The Java Tutorials have been written for JDK 8. Examples and practices described in this page don't take advantage of improvements introduced in later releases.

Compatibility

The Java Collections Framework was designed to ensure complete interoperability between the core
collection interfaces and the types that were used to represent collections in the early versions of the Java platform:
Vector,
Hashtable,
array, and
Enumeration. In this section, you'll learn how to transform old collections to the Java Collections Framework collections and vice versa.

Upward Compatibility

Suppose that you're using an API that returns legacy collections in tandem with another API that requires objects implementing the collection interfaces. To make the two APIs interoperate smoothly, you'll have to transform the legacy collections into modern collections. Luckily, the Java Collections Framework makes this easy.

Suppose the old API returns an array of objects and the new API requires a Collection. The Collections Framework has a convenience implementation that allows an array of objects to be viewed as a List. You use
Arrays.asList to pass an array to any method requiring a Collection or a List.

Foo[] result = oldMethod(arg);
newMethod(Arrays.asList(result));

If the old API returns a Vector or a Hashtable, you have no work to do at all because Vector was retrofitted to implement the List interface, and Hashtable was retrofitted to implement Map. Therefore, a Vector may be passed directly to any method calling for a Collection or a List.

Vector result = oldMethod(arg);
newMethod(result);

Similarly, a Hashtable may be passed directly to any method calling for a Map.

Hashtable result = oldMethod(arg);
newMethod(result);

Less frequently, an API may return an Enumeration that represents a collection of objects. The Collections.list method translates an Enumeration into a Collection.

Enumeration e = oldMethod(arg);
newMethod(Collections.list(e));

Backward Compatibility

Suppose you're using an API that returns modern collections in tandem with another API that requires you to pass in legacy collections. To make the two APIs interoperate smoothly, you have to transform modern collections into old collections. Again, the Java Collections Framework makes this easy.

Suppose the new API returns a Collection, and the old API requires an array of Object. As you're probably aware, the Collection interface contains a toArray method designed expressly for this situation.

Collection c = newMethod();
oldMethod(c.toArray());

What if the old API requires an array of String (or another type) instead of an array of Object? You just use the other form of toArray  the one that takes an array on input.

If the old API requires a Vector, the standard collection constructor comes in handy.

Collection c = newMethod();
oldMethod(new Vector(c));

The case where the old API requires a Hashtable is handled analogously.

Map m = newMethod();
oldMethod(new Hashtable(m));

Finally, what do you do if the old API requires an Enumeration? This case isn't common, but it does happen from time to time, and the
Collections.enumeration method was provided to handle it. This is a static factory method that takes a Collection and returns an Enumeration over the elements of the Collection.